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Hypertension in dialysis and kidney transplant patients
Authors:GV Ramesh Prasad  Marcel Ruzicka  Kevin D Burns  Sheldon W Tobe  and Marcel Lebel
Institution:1 Division of Nephrology, Transplantation, St Michael''s Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto;2 Division of Nephrology, University of Ottawa;3 Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, The Ottawa Hospital, University of Ottawa, Ottawa;4 University of Toronto, Division of Nephrology, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario;5 Department of Medicine, l’Université Laval, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Quebec Research Centre, L’Hôtel-Dieu de Québec Hospital, Quebec City, Quebec
Abstract:For the first time, the Canadian Hypertension Education Program has studied the evidence supporting blood pressure control in people requiring renal replacement therapy for end-stage kidney disease, including those on dialysis and with renal transplants. According to the Canadian Organ Replacement Registry’s 2008 annual report, there were an estimated 33,832 people with end-stage renal disease in Canada at the end of 2006, an increase of 69.7% since 1997. Of these, 20,465 were on dialysis and 13,367 were living with a functioning kidney transplant. Thus, it is becoming more likely that primary care practitioners will be helping to care for these complex patients. With the lack of large controlled clinical trials, the consensus recommendation based on interpretation of the existing literature is that blood pressure should be lowered to below 140/90 mmHg in hypertensive patients on renal replacement therapy and to below 130/80 mmHg for renal transplant patients with diabetes or chronic kidney disease.
Keywords:Antihypertensive drugs  Calcineurin inhibitors  Corticosteroids  Hemodialysis  Immunosuppression  Kidney transplantation  Peritoneal dialysis  Renal artery stenosis
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